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1.
Inactivation of factor VIII by activated protein C and protein S   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Factor VIII was inactivated by activated protein C in the presence of calcium and phospholipids. Analysis of the activated protein C-catalyzed cleavage products of factor VIII indicated that inactivation resulted from the cleavage of the heavy chains. The heavy chains appeared to be converted into 93- and 53-kDa peptides. Inactivation of factor VIII that was only composed of the 93-kDa heavy chain and 83-kDa light chain indicated that the 93-kDa polypeptide could be degraded into a 68-kDa peptide that could be subsequently cleaved into 48- and 23-kDa polypeptides. Thus, activated protein C catalyzed a minimum of four cleavages in the heavy chain. Activated protein C did not appear to alter the factor VIII light chain. The addition of protein S accelerated the rate of inactivation and the rate of all of the cleavages. The effect of protein S could be observed on the cleavage of the heavy chains and on secondary cleavages of the smaller products, including the 93-, 68-, and 53-kDa polypeptides. The addition of factor IX to the factor VIII-activated protein C reaction mixture resulted in the inhibition of factor VIII inactivation. The effect of factor IX was dose dependent. Factor VIII was observed to compete with factor Va for activated protein C. The concentration dependence of factor VIII inhibition of factor Va inactivation suggested that factor VIII and factor Va were equivalent substrates for activated protein C.  相似文献   

2.
The inactivation of Factor Va by plasmin was studied in the presence and absence of phospholipid vesicles and calcium ions. The cleavage patterns of bovine Factor Va and its isolated subunits were analyzed using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the progress of inactivation was monitored by clotting assays and measurements of prothrombin activation using 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonylarginine-N-(3-ethyl-1,5-penta nediyl)amide. In addition, the ability of prothrombin and Factor Xa to protect Factor Va from inactivation by human plasmin was examined. The data presented indicate that the cofactor Factor Va is inactivated rapidly upon its interaction with human plasmin. The rate of inactivation is significantly enhanced in the presence of phospholipid vesicles, suggesting that the inactivation process is a membrane-bound phenomenon. The isolated D component (heavy chain of factor Va) was found to be slowly degraded by human plasmin, giving rise to cleavage products different from those obtained with activated protein C and Factor Xa. However, the 48- and 30-kDa fragments obtained from human plasmin degradation of component E (light chain of Factor Va) appear to be similar to those obtained following the proteolysis of the same subunit by activated protein C and Factor Xa.  相似文献   

3.
Proteolysis of factor Va by factor Xa and activated protein C   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Bovine Factor Va, produced by selective proteolytic cleavage of Factor V by thrombin, consists of a heavy chain (D chain) of Mr = 94,000 and a light chain (E chain) of Mr = 74,000. These peptides are noncovalently associated in the presence of divalent metal ion(s). Each chain is susceptible to proteolysis by activated protein C and by Factor Xa. Sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoretic analysis indicates that cleavage of the E chain by either activated protein C or Factor Xa yields two major fragments: Mr = 30,000 and Mr = 48,000. Amino acid sequence analysis indicates that the Mr = 30,000 fragments have identical NH2-terminal sequences and that this sequence corresponds to that of intact E chain. The Mr = 48,000 fragments also have identical NH2-terminal sequences, indicating that activated protein C and Factor Xa cleave the E chain at the same position. Sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoretic analysis indicates that activated protein C cleavage of the D chain yields two products: Mr = 70,000 and Mr = 24,000. Amino acid sequence analysis indicates that the Mr = 70,000 fragment has the same NH2-terminal sequence as intact D chain, whereas the Mr = 24,000 fragment does not. Factor Xa cleavage of the D chain also yields two products: Mr = 56,000 and Mr = 45,000. The Mr = 56,000 fragment corresponds to the NH2-terminal end of the D chain and Factor V. Functional studies have shown that both chains of Factor Va may be entirely cleaved to products by Factor Xa without loss of activity, whereas activated protein C cleavage results in loss of activity. Since activated protein C and Factor Xa cleave the E chain at the same position, the cleavage of the D chain by activated protein C is responsible for the inactivation of Factor Va.  相似文献   

4.
Factor VIII is represented as a series of heterodimers composed of an 83(81) kDa light chain noncovalently bound to a variable size (93 to 210 kDa) heavy chain. Activated protein C inactivates factor VIII causing several cleavages of the factor VIII heavy chain(s). When factor VIII subunits were dissociated and component heavy and light chains isolated, the heavy chains were no longer a substrate for proteolysis by activated protein C. However, when factor VIII heavy chains were recombined with light chain, the reconstituted factor VIII activity was inactivated by activated protein C. The rate of factor VIII inactivation catalyzed by activated protein C was reduced by the presence of free light chain. The extent of this inhibition was dependent upon the concentration of light chain. Control experiments indicated that this protective effect of free light chain was not the result of inhibition of the activated protein C - lipid interaction. Fluorescence analysis demonstrated binding between the factor VIII light chain, chemically modified with eosin maleimide, and activated protein C, modified at its active site by dansyl-Glu-Gly-Arg chloromethyl ketone. Similar to proteolysis of factor VIII by activated protein C, this binding was dependent upon a lipid surface. Based upon the degree of fluorescence quenching, a spatial distance of 26 A was calculated separating the two fluorophores. These results demonstrate direct binding of activated protein C to the factor VIII light chain and suggest that this binding is an obligate step for activated protein C-catalyzed inactivation of factor VIII.  相似文献   

5.
Factor Va (fVa) is inactivated by activated protein C (APC) by cleavage of the heavy chain at Arg306, Arg506, and Arg679. Site-directed mutagenesis of human factor V cDNA was used to substitute Arg306-->Ala (rfVa306A) and Arg506-->Gln (rfVa506Q). Both the single and double mutants (rfVa306A/506Q) were constructed. The activation of these procofactors by alpha-thrombin and their inactivation by APC were assessed in coagulation assays using factor V-deficient plasma. All recombinant and wild-type proteins had similar initial cofactor activity and identical activation products (a factor Va molecule composed of light and heavy chains). Inactivation of factor Va purified from human plasma (fVaPLASMA) in HBS Ca2+ +0.5% BSA or in conditioned media by APC in the presence of phospholipid vesicles resulted in identical inactivation profiles and displayed identical cleavage patterns. Recombinant wild-type factor Va (rfVaWT) was inactivated by APC in the presence of phospholipid vesicles at an overall rate slower than fVaPLASMA. The rfVa306A and rfVa506Q mutants were each inactivated at rates slower than rfVaWT and fVaPLASMA. Following a 90-min incubation with APC, rfVa306A and rfVa506Q retain approximately 30-40% of the initial cofactor activity. The double mutant, rfVa306A/506Q, was completely resistant to cleavage and inactivation by APC retaining 100% of the initial cofactor activity following a 90-min incubation in the presence of APC. Recombinant fVaWT, rfVa306A, rfVa506Q, and rfVa306A/506Q were also used to evaluate the effect of protein S on the individual cleavage sites of the cofactor by APC. The initial rates of rfVaWT and rfVa306A inactivation in the presence of protein S were unchanged, indicating cleavage at Arg506 is not affected by protein S. The initial rate of rfVa506Q inactivation was increased, suggesting protein S slightly accelerates the cleavage at Arg306. Overall, the data demonstrate high specificity with respect to cleavage sites for APC on factor Va and demonstrate that cleavages of the cofactor at both Arg306 and Arg506 are required for efficient factor Va inactivation.  相似文献   

6.
Interaction of prothrombin with factor Va-phospholipid complexes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effects of factor Va and the phospholipid-binding fragment of factor Va [factor Va light chain (LC), Mr 80000] on the binding of prothrombin, factor X, and factor Xa to phospholipid vesicles are reported. Equilibrium binding experiments were performed that utilized large-volume vesicles, which can be removed from the bulk solution by centrifugation. Factor Va decreased the dissociation constant of the prothrombin-phospholipid complex 50-fold, from 2.0 X 10(-7) M to 4.0 X 10(-9) M. For the factor X-phospholipid complex the decrease was 60-fold (1.8 X 10(-7) M to 3.0 X 10(-9) M) and for factor Xa, 160-fold (1.6 X 10(-7) M to 1.0 X 10(-9) M). The ratios of moles of protein bound to moles of total added factor Va at saturation of phospholipid-bound factor Va indicate an 1:1 stoichiometric complex of either factor Xa, factor X, or prothrombin and phospholipid-bound factor Va. In the presence of factor Va LC, the dissociation constants of factor Xa- and prothrombin-phospholipid complexes were increased, while the maximal protein-binding capacities of the vesicles were not affected by factor Va LC. The data suggest a competitive interaction between factor Xa and factor Va LC binding as well as between prothrombin and factor Va LC binding at the phospholipid surface. From this, it is concluded that the phospholipid-binding fragment of factor Va alone does not serve as the binding site for interactions of factor Xa and prothrombin with factor Va.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism of inactivation of bovine factor Va by plasmin was studied in the presence and absence of phospholipid vesicles (PCPS vesicles). Following 60-min incubation with plasmin (4 nm) membrane-bound factor Va (400 nm) is completely inactive, whereas in the absence of phospholipid vesicles following a 1-h incubation period, the cofactor retains 90% of its initial cofactor activity. Amino acid sequencing of the fragments deriving from cleavage of factor Va by plasmin demonstrated that while both chains of factor Va are cleaved by plasmin, only cleavage of the heavy chain correlates with inactivation of the cofactor. In the presence of a membrane surface the heavy chain of the bovine cofactor is first cleaved at Arg(348) to generate a fragment of M(r) 47,000 containing the NH(2)-terminal part of the cofactor (amino acid residues 1-348) and a M(r) 42,000 fragment (amino acid residues 349-713). This cleavage is associated with minimal loss in cofactor activity. Complete loss of activity of the membrane-bound cofactor coincides with three cleavages at the COOH-terminal portion of the M(r) 47,000 fragment: Lys(309), Lys(310), and Arg(313). These cleavages result in the release of the COOH terminus of the molecule and the production of a M(r) 40,000 fragment containing the NH(2)-terminal portion of the factor Va molecule. Factor Va was treated with plasmin in the absence of phospholipid vesicles followed by the addition of PCPS vesicles and activated protein C (APC). A rapid inactivation of the cofactor was observed as a result of cleavage of the M(r) 47,000 fragment at Arg(306) by APC and appearance of a M(r) 39,000 fragment. These data suggest a critical role of the amino acid sequence 307-348 of factor Va. A 42-amino acid peptide encompassing the region 307-348 of human factor Va (N42R) was found to be a good inhibitor of factor Va clotting activity with an IC(50) of approximately 1.3 microm. These data suggest that plasmin is a potent inactivator of factor Va and that region 307-348 of the cofactor plays a critical role in cofactor function and may be responsible for the interaction of the cofactor with factor Xa and/or prothrombin.  相似文献   

8.
Homocysteine inhibits inactivation of factor Va by activated protein C   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
We report the effect of homocysteine on the inactivation of factor Va by activated protein C (APC) using clotting assays, immunoblotting, and radiolabeling experiments. Homocysteine, cysteine, or homocysteine thiolactone have no effect on factor V activation by alpha-thrombin. Factor Va derived from homocysteine-treated factor V was inactivated by APC at a reduced rate. The inactivation impairment increased with increasing homocysteine concentration (pseudo first order rate k = 1.2, 0.9, 0.7, 0.4 min(-1) at 0, 0.03, 0.1, 1 mm homocysteine, respectively). Neither cysteine nor homocysteine thiolactone treatment of factor V affected APC inactivation of derived factor Va. Western blot analyses of APC inactivation of homocysteine-modified factor Va are consistent with the results of clotting assays. Factor Va, derived from factor V treated with 1 mm beta-mercaptoethanol was inactivated more rapidly than the untreated protein sample. Factor V incubated with [(35)S]homocysteine (10-450 micrometer) incorporated label within 5 min, which was found only in those fragments that contained free sulfhydryl groups: the light chain (Cys-1960, Cys-2113), the B region (Cys-1085), and the 26/28-kDa (residues 507-709) APC cleavage products of the heavy chain (Cys-539, Cys-585). Treatment with beta-mercaptoethanol removed all radiolabel. Plasma of patients assessed to be hyperhomocysteinemic showed APC resistance in a clot-based assay. Our results indicate that homocysteine rapidly incorporates into factor V and that the prothrombotic tendency in hyperhomocysteinemia may be related to impaired inactivation of factor Va by APC due to homocysteinylation of the cofactor by modification of free cysteine(s).  相似文献   

9.
The binding of activated protein C to factors V and Va   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Activated protein C has been derivatized with the active site-directed fluorophore 2-(dimethylamino)-6-naphthalenesulfonylglutamylglycylarginyl chloromethyl ketone (2,6-DEGR-APC). Covalently modified activated protein C has been used to investigate the binding interactions of the protein to factors V and Va in the presence of phospholipid vesicles. The fluorescence polarization of the 6-dimethylaminonaphthalene-2-sulfonyl moiety increased saturably with increasing phospholipid concentrations in the presence or absence of factor V or Va. Differences in the limiting polarization values indicated distinguishable differences in the interactions between 2,6-DEGR-APC and phospholipid in the presence of factor V or Va. The dissociation constant calculated for the 2,6-DEGR-APC/phospholipid interaction (7.3 X 10(-8) M) was not significantly altered by factor V but was decreased to 7 X 10(-9) M in the presence of factor Va. The interaction between 2,6-DEGR-APC and factor V or Va was characterized by a 1:1 stoichiometry. The binding of 2,6-DEGR-APC to factor V or Va in the presence of phospholipid could be reduced in a competitive manner by diisopropylphosphofluoridate-treated activated protein C. An analysis of the displacement curves indicated that the binding of 2,6-DEGR-APC was indistinguishable from the binding of diisopropylphosphofluoridate-treated activated protein C. The interaction between 2,6-DEGR-APC and phospholipid-bound factor Va was further examined using the isolated subunits of factor Va. Fluorescence polarization changes observed with component E of Va (light chain) closely corresponded with the changes observed with factor Va, whereas isolated component D (heavy chain) had little influence on the binding of 2,6-DEGR-APC to phospholipid vesicles. The data presented are consistent with the interpretation that component E of factor Va contains a binding site for activated protein C.  相似文献   

10.
Bovine factor Va has been previously been shown to consist of heavy (M(r) = 94,000) and light chains (M(r) = 81,000), that interact in a manner dependent upon the presence of either calcium or manganese ions. In an attempt to understand the mechanism of subunit interaction we have studied the effects of temperature and ions on factor Va stability. The rates of formation of factor Va from isolated chains and dissociation were temperature-dependent with an energy of activation of 6.2 and 1.3 kcal mol-1, respectively. The yield of factor Va from isolated chains was inversely related to the amount of time the chains were incubated at 4 degrees C. Incubation of individual chains revealed that the heavy chain is cold-labile, an effect that is reversible. Manganese ion was observed to prevent the conversion to the inactive form. High salt tends to stabilize the two-chain structure of factor Va, but is inhibitory to its formation from isolated chains. High concentrations of either manganese or calcium ions also inhibited reconstitution of activity. The light chain, in particular, was sensitive to the presence of manganese or calcium ion. Heavy chain that had been cleaved by activated protein C had a weakened interaction with the light chain, and the resulting complex had no procoagulant activity. Cooling of the heavy chain to 4 degrees C enhanced its intrinsic fluorescence. Manganese ion prevented some of this enhancement. The heavy chain fluorescence returned to the room temperature value with a half-life of approximately 10 min. In the presence of manganese ion relaxation was accelerated. The intrinsic fluorescence of activated protein C-cleaved heavy chain was not increased when the temperature was decreased. These data suggest that the heavy chain can exist in two forms. Elevated temperature converts it to a form that can bind ions and have a productive interaction with the light chain. However, conditions that prevent the heavy chain from combining with the light chain also stabilize the two subunit structure, suggesting that the high affinity of the complex is due to conformational changes that occur after chain interaction.  相似文献   

11.
Plasmin not only functions as a key enzyme in the fibrinolytic system but also directly inactivates factor VIII and other clotting factors such as factor V. However, the mechanisms of plasmin-catalyzed factor VIII inactivation are poorly understood. In this study, levels of factor VIII activity increased approximately 2-fold within 3 min in the presence of plasmin, and subsequently decreased to undetectable levels within 45 min. This time-dependent reaction was not affected by von Willebrand factor and phospholipid. The rate constant of plasmin-catalyzed factor VIIIa inactivation was approximately 12- and approximately 3.7-fold greater than those mediated by factor Xa and activated protein C, respectively. SDS-PAGE analysis showed that plasmin cleaved the heavy chain of factor VIII into two terminal products, A1(37-336) and A2 subunits, by limited proteolysis at Lys(36), Arg(336), Arg(372), and Arg(740). The 80-kDa light chain was converted into a 67-kDa subunit by cleavage at Arg(1689) and Arg(1721), identical to the pattern induced by factor Xa. Plasmin-catalyzed cleavage at Arg(336) proceeded faster than that at Arg(372), in contrast to proteolysis by factor Xa. Furthermore, breakdown was faster than that in the presence of activated protein C, consistent with rapid inactivation of factor VIII. The cleavages at Arg(336) and Lys(36) occurred rapidly in the presence of A2 and A3-C1-C2 subunits, respectively. These results strongly indicated that cleavage at Arg(336) was a central mechanism of plasmin-catalyzed factor VIII inactivation. Furthermore, the cleavages at Arg(336) and Lys(36) appeared to be selectively regulated by the A2 and A3-C1-C2 domains, respectively, interacting with plasmin.  相似文献   

12.
The inactivation of factor Va is a complex process which includes bond cleavage (at three sites) and dissociation of the A2N.A2C peptides, with intermediate activity in each species. Quantitation of the functional consequences of each step in the reaction has allowed for understanding of the presentation of disease in individuals possessing the factor V polymorphism factor VLEIDEN. APC cleavage of membrane-bound bovine factor Va (Arg306, Arg505, Arg662) leads to the dissociation of fragments of the A2 domain, residues 307-713 (A2N.A2C + A2C-peptide), leaving behind the membrane-bound A1.LC species. Evaluation of the dissociation process by light scattering yields invariant mass loss estimates as a function of APC concentration. The rate constant for A2 fragment dissociation varies with [APC], reaching a maximal value of k = 0.028 s-1, the unimolecular rate constant for A2 domain fragment dissociation. The APC binding site resides in the factor Va light chain (LC) (Kd = 7 nM), suggesting that the membrane-bound LC.A1 product would act to sequester APC. This inhibitory interaction (LC.A1.APC) is demonstrated to exist with either purified factor Va LC or the products of factor Va inactivation. Utilizing these experimental data and the reported rates of bond cleavage, binding constants, and product activity values for factor Va partial inactivation products, a model is developed which describes factor Va inactivation and accounts for the defect in factor VLEIDEN. The model accurately predicts the rates of inactivation of factor Va and factor VaLEIDEN, and the effect of product inhibition. Modeled reaction progress diagrams and activity profiles (from either factor Va or factor VaLEIDEN) are coincident with experimentally derived data, providing a mechanistic and kinetic explanation for all steps in the inactivation of normal factor Va and the pathology associated with factor VLEIDEN.  相似文献   

13.
Activated protein C has been observed to bind to the light chains of factor Va and factor VIII. Fragments of the factor VIII light chain were produced by recombinant DNA techniques and expressed in Escherichia coli. Three fragments of the light chain were studied; L4 (residues 1974-2332), L3.2 (residues 1560-1829 and 2046-2332), and L3.3 (residues 1560-2052). Two fragments, L4 and L3.3, which overlapped sequences between residues 1974-2052, inhibited the anticoagulant activity of activated protein C. Comparison of the sequences of factors V and VIII in this region revealed that residues 2005-2018 in the factor VIII sequence were homologous with residues 1861-1874 in the factor V sequence. The peptides Arg-Ala-Gly-Met-Gln-Thr-Phe-Leu-Ile (RAGMQTPFLI; residues 1865-1874) from the factor V sequence and His-Ala-Gly-Met-Ser-Thr-Leu-Phe-Ile-Val (HAGMSTLFIV; residues 2009-2018) from the factor VIII sequence were synthesized. Both peptides were observed to inhibit the anticoagulant activity of activated protein C and its inactivation of factors Va and VIII. Furthermore RAGMQTPFLI quenched the fluorescence of the dansyl-Glu-Gly-Arg-modified protease. Polyclonal antibodies against RAGMQTPFLI bound to factor Va and inhibited the anticoagulant activity of activated protein C and the inactivation of factor Va. These results indicate that a portion of the binding sites for activated protein C on the light chains of factors V and VIII are contained in the sequences RAGMQTPFLI or HAGMSTLFIV, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The prothrombin-converting activity of Factor Xa was enhanced by thrombin-stimulated Factor V-deficient platelets and supplementary extraneous Factor Va, and also by thrombin-stimulated normal human platelets. Both extraneous Factor Va and intra-platelet Factor Va were equally inactivated by a gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-containing plasma protease, activated protein C. However, a relatively larger amount of activated protein C was required for efficient inactivation of platelet-associated Factor Va as compared with the amount of activated protein C needed for inactivation of phospholipid vesicle-associated Factor Va. Protein S, another gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-containing plasma protein, increased the rate of the inactivation of platelet-associated Factor Va about 25-fold. This stimulating effect was observed only slightly with the thrombin-modified protein S. Thus, it was concluded that protein S is essential for the process of inactivation of platelet-associated Factor Va by activated protein C.  相似文献   

15.
Human factor VIII and factor VIIIa were proteolytically inactivated by activated protein C. Cleavages occurred within the heavy chain (contiguous A1-A2-B domains) of factor VIII and in the heavy chain-derived A1 and A2 subunits of factor VIIIa, whereas no proteolysis was observed in the light chain or light chain-derived A3-C1-C2 subunit. Reactivity to an anti-A2 domain monoclonal antibody and NH2-terminal sequence analysis of three terminal digest fragments from factor VIII allowed ordering of fragments and identification of cleavage sites. Fragment A1 was derived from the NH2 terminus and resulted from cleavage at Arg336-Met337. The A2 domain was bisected following cleavage at Arg562-Gly563 and yielded fragments designated A2N and A2C. A third cleavage site is proposed at the A2-B junction (Arg740-Ser741) since fragment A2C was of equivalent size when derived either from factor VIII or factor VIIIa. The site at Arg562 was preferentially cleaved first in factor VIII(alpha) compared with the site at Arg336, and it was this initial cleavage that most closely correlated with the loss of cofactor activity. Factor VIIIa was inactivated 5-fold faster than factor VIII, possibly as a result of increased protease utilization of the site at Arg562 when the A2 subunit is not contiguous with the A1 domain. When initial cleavage occurred at Arg336, it appeared to preclude subsequent cleavage at Arg562, possibly by promoting dissociation of the A2 domain (subunit) from the A1/light chain dimer. This conclusion was supported by the failure of protease treated A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer to bind A2 subunit and gel filtration analysis that showed dissociation of the A2 domain-derived fragments, A2N and A2C, from the A1 fragment/light chain dimer. These results suggest a mechanism for activated protein C-catalyzed inactivation of factor VIII(alpha) involving both covalent alteration and fragment dissociation.  相似文献   

16.
Thrombin-activated factor Va and factor Va subunit binding to large-volume vesicles was investigated by a technique based on the separation by centrifugation of phospholipid-bound protein from the bulk solution. This technique allows the direct measurement of free-protein concentration. It is concluded that the phospholipid binding site on factor Va is located on a basic factor Va subunit with Mr 80 000 (factor Va-LC). The effects of phospholipid vesicle composition, calcium concentration, pH, and ionic strength on the equilibrium constants of factor Va- and factor Va-LC-phospholipid interaction were studied. Factor Va and factor Va-LC binding to phospholipid requires the presence of negatively charged phospholipids. It is further demonstrated that the following occur: (a) Calcium ions compete with factor Va and factor Va-LC for phospholipid-binding sites. (b) The dissociation constant of protein-phospholipid interaction increases with the ionic strength, whereas the maximum protein-binding capacity of the phospholipid vesicle was not affected by ionic strength. (c) The dissociation constant for factor Va-phospholipid interaction depends on pH when the vesicle consists of phosphatidic acid. It is concluded that factor Va-phospholipid interaction is primarily electrostatic in nature, where positively charged groups on the protein directly interact with the phosphate group of net negatively charged phospholipids. The results suggest that factor Va, like factor Xa and prothrombin, has the characteristics of an extrinsic membrane protein.  相似文献   

17.
Proteolytic alterations of factor Va bound to platelets   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The coagulation protein Factor Va forms the receptor for the serine protease Factor Xa at the platelet surface. This membrane-bound complex of Factor Va and Factor Xa plus calcium constitutes the enzymatic complex prothrombinase, which effects the conversion of prothrombin to the clotting enzyme, thrombin. Studies were undertaken to investigate the proteolytic events accompanying the inactivation of platelet-bound Factor Va by activated protein C as well as the ability of Factor Xa to protect Factor Va from activated protein C inactivation. During the course of these studies, observations were made which indicated that Factor Va was also cleaved by both a platelet-associated protease, as well as Factor Xa. When Factor Va was incubated with washed platelets, electrophoresis and autoradiography of solubilized platelet pellets indicated that three Factor Va peptides were associated with the platelet: component D (Mr = 94,000), component E (Mr = 74,000), and a 90,000-dalton peptide (component D') which appeared with time as the result of a platelet-associated protease cleavage of component D. The Factor Va peptides bound to platelets were proteolytically inactivated by activated protein C, resulting in five peptide products, all of which remained associated with the platelet-membrane surface. Factor Va was protected from activated protein C proteolysis by complex formation with Factor Xa or active site-blocked Factor Xa. However, active Factor Xa cleaved platelet-bound Factor Va to peptide products which also remained associated with the platelet. Whereas activated protein C rapidly cleaved components D and D' with secondary cleavages occurring in component E, Factor Xa rapidly cleaved component E with secondary cleavages occurring in components D and D'. The Factor Xa-cleaved Factor Va is catalytically functional. To determine whether cleavage was necessary for function, prothrombin conversion reaction mixtures were monitored for thrombin formation and Factor Va cleavage with time in a defined phospholipid vesicle model system. The results indicated that Factor Xa cleavage of Factor Va is not essential for Factor Va activity but may promote its ability to function in the prothrombinase complex.  相似文献   

18.
Orban T  Kalafatis M  Gogonea V 《Biochemistry》2005,44(39):13082-13090
Factor Va is the critical cofactor for prothrombinase assembly required for timely and efficient prothrombin activation. In the absence of a complete crystal structure for the cofactor, Pellequer et al. [(2000) Thromb. Haemostasis 84, 849-857] proposed an incomplete homology model of factor Va (it lacks 46 amino acids from the carboxyl terminus of the heavy chain), which is a static model in a vacuum. A recently published X-ray structure of activated protein C (APC) inactivated bovine factor Va(i) (without the A2 domain) suggests a completely new arrangement of the C1 and C2 domains as compared with the previously published structure of the recombinant C1 and C2 domains. Our aims were (a) to exchange the C1 and C2 domains of the homology model with the modified bovine C1 and C2 domains using the X-ray structure as a template, (b) to determine by computation the three-dimensional model for the carboxyl-terminal peptide of the factor Va heavy chain (Ser(664)-Arg(709)) and incorporate it into the incomplete model, (c) to obtain a complete model of the cofactor folded in solution that might account for its physiological functions and interactions with other components of prothrombinase, and (d) to use the model in order to understand the mechanism of factor Va inactivation by APC. In the first step a sequence alignment of the human and bovine C1 and C2 domains was performed followed by amino acid changes in the three-dimensional structure where the sequences were not identical. The new model of the C1 and C2 domains was then attached to the homology model. The analysis of the MD simulation data revealed that several domains of the cofactor were significantly displaced during simulation. Using our completed model of human factor Va, we are also demonstrating for the first time that cleavage of membrane-bound normal factor Va as well as membrane-bound factor V(LEIDEN) by APC at Arg(306) is required for the dissociation of the A2 domain from the rest of the molecule. Thus, differences in the inactivation rates of the two cofactor molecules are due to differences in the rate of cleavage at Arg(306). The data demonstrate that our model represents the foundation for the establishment of a complete prothrombinase complex model, which might be successful in describing accurately the ternary protein-protein interaction and thus accounts for experimental observations.  相似文献   

19.
Thirteen monoclonal antibodies designated as MFC-1 to MFC-13 were obtained from hybridoma cells cloned after the fusion of mouse myeloma cells with spleen cells of mice immunized with purified human protein C. Studies were made to determine where the antibodies bound to the molecule of protein C and whether they affected the biological actions of protein C. By using the immunoblotting technique, six of these antibodies were shown to bind to the light chain of protein C, and five to the heavy chain of protein C and also activated protein C. The remaining two antibodies bound to neither the light chain nor the heavy chain, though both antibodies bound to the intact protein C. Antibodies specific for the light chain did not bind to the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-domain. Two of the antibodies specific for the heavy chain (MFC-13 and -1) inhibited the amidolytic activity of activated protein C. The MFC-13 also inhibited the activity of bovine activated protein C, but not that of human Factor IXa, Factor Xa, or thrombin. In addition to these two antibodies, another one for the heavy chain (MFC-10) and two antibodies for the light chain (MFC-9 and -11) inhibited the inactivation of Factor Va by human activated protein C. One of the antibodies which inhibited the enzyme activity (MFC-1) blocked the inhibition of activated protein C by protein C inhibitor. Another one for the heavy chain (MFC-5) inhibited the activation of protein C by thrombin regardless of the presence or absence of thrombomodulin. Based on these results, we have established the positions of some monoclonal antibody-binding sites on the protein C molecule.  相似文献   

20.
Inactivation of factor Va (FVa) by activated protein C (APC) is a key reaction in the down-regulation of thrombin formation. FVa inactivation by APC is correlated with a loss of FXa cofactor activity as a result of three proteolytic cleavages in the FVa heavy chain at Arg306, Arg506, and Arg679. Recently, we have shown that heparin specifically inhibits the APC-mediated cleavage at Arg506 and stimulates cleavage at Arg306. Three-dimensional molecular models of APC docked at the Arg306 and Arg506 cleavage sites in FVa have identified several FVa amino acids that may be important for FVa inactivation by APC in the absence and presence of heparin. Mutagenesis of Lys320, Arg321, and Arg400 to Ala resulted in an increased inactivation rate by APC at Arg306, which indicates the importance of these residues in the FVa-APC interaction. No heparin-mediated stimulation of Arg306 cleavage was observed for these mutants, and stimulation by protein S was similar to that of wild type FVa. With this, we have now demonstrated that a cluster of basic residues in FVa comprising Lys320, Arg321, and Arg400 is required for the heparin-mediated stimulation of cleavage at Arg306 by APC. Furthermore, mutations that were introduced near the Arg506 cleavage site had a significant but modest effect on the rate of APC-catalyzed FVa inactivation, suggesting an extended interaction surface between the FVa Arg506 site and APC.  相似文献   

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